Chris Marker, Corénnenes, English Text

Transcription

Chris Marker, Corénnenes, English Text
Chr i s Mar ke r
ENGLI SH TRANSLATION
THIS PUBLICATION ACCOMPANIES
FOREWORD
1
( 7)
1 THE SI X DAYS
5
(14)
2 T H E T WO O R P H A N S
9
(32)
3 THE S EVEN W O N D E R S
11 (41)
4 • THE FIVE S E N S E S
15 (65)
Text provided by and used with the
permission of Chris Marker.
5 THE THREE SISTERS
19 (79)
Translation: Brian Holmes.
6 • TH E N I N E M U S E S
23 (103)
Coréennes also is included on Marker’s
Immemory CD-KOM (Centre Georges
Pompidou/Films de l’Astrophore,
1997-98; English version published by
Exact Change, 2002, 2008).
7 THE F O U R C O R N E R S
25 (127)
AFTERWORD 1997
29 (148)
Coréennes (Seoul, Noonbit Publishing,
2008) : a facsimile edition, in Korean
only, of Coréennes (Paris, Éditions
du Seuil, 1959), written by Chris
Marker.
ISBN 9788974091897
The text is an English translation of the
French text originally appearing
in Coréennes. Also included are an
afterword and several notes written
by Chris Marker in 1997.
PRODUCED BY
Wexner Center Store, 2009
Manager: Matt Reber
Wexner Center for the Arts
The Ohio State University
1871 North High Street
Columbus, Ohio 43210
www.wexarts.org
Cover printed by letter press at
OSU Libraries’ Center for Book Arts,
The Ohio State University, in an
edition of 200.
Designer: Erica Anderson
(#)s correspond with the accompanying
Coréennes faesmile publication
FOREWORD
On September 25, 1866, the escort vessel D éroulède appeared in Seoul harbor.
Its name implied revenge.* That March, the Koreans had massacred several French
missionaries in a quite revolting manner (for the time), and it was normal that the French
fleet should come to punish the outrage to its countrymen Only the Scriptures might
have found objection.
Aboard the corvette Primauguet, also part of the expedition, was a naval officer
named H, Zuber, who kept a logbook. The excerpts he published in the Tour du Monde
of 1873 are most illuminating for anyone interested in Franco-Korean relations.
While the D éroulède lay at anchor, “a mandarin named the Friend of the People”
came aboard, bearing this message: “Now that you h av e seen the river an d the m ountains
o f this insignificant little kingdom, p lease have the goodness to leave. The people will be
glad o f it’.’ “We reassured him ,” Zuber relates.
Another mandarin had addressed those on the Primauguet: “He was absolutely
intent on knowing why we had come to Korea. We told him that all we had in view was
the observation of an eclipse of the moon which was to take place within a few days. He
did not seem satisfied with this response...”
For his part, Zuber observed “our future enemies.” He describes them like some
tribe of Zulus, fascinated by all the wonders of European technology, particularly the
boats. The upstanding officer was not obliged to know that the Koreans had invented the
armored battleship in the sixteenth century, nor that their “turtle-boats” with 72 batteries
on a side had routed the Japanese fleet in 1552. There was certainly the occasion to
meditate on the decline and fall of empires, but although Zuber allowed himself a quite
pertinent reflection on the abundance of books in the houses, he seemed to neglect
a few of Korea’s modest contributions to culture: the invention of movable type and
wood-block engraving, the first national encyclopedia, the first astronomical observatory
(and even, a paradox in the circumstances, the first Buddhist missionaries sent to Japan).
These people of “careless education” so greatly contributed to the education of their
easterly neighbor that other visitors, discovering Korean art after that of Japan, came to
turn the reflection around backwards, like the collector who saw a touch of Picasso in
certain African masks. Behind their poor façades, Korean artisans have perfected the
most beautiful paper on carth-for instance, the “tribute paper” on which Ségalen had his
Korean collection printed by Crès, to the enthusiasm of Claudel: “It is like a pearly felt
whose transparency reveals seaweed, women’s hair, the sinews of fish, cultures of stars
or bacilli, billowing vapor and a whole world in formation...” As to the soldier’s trade,
our floating gunner might have been pleased to know that the Koreans had used the first
cannons, the first bombs, and all kinds of contraptions and tools of war, including the
elusive four pronged star whose last examples, wrested from the museums, served again
in 1951 against American jeeps.
’NOTE, 1997: Paul Deroulede was the most famous nationalist writer in France
before WW1.
-
After the reconnaissance mission, the fleet regrouped and moved into action. On
October 14, an expeditionary force gathered at Kak-Kodji, just off Kanghwado island. The
inhabitants took flight. On the 16th, the city of Kanghwa was occupied. Its inhabitants
took flight. On the 18th, the expedition leader received a missive from the Regent of
kings, still one cannot pass over o n e’s own magnanimity in silence."
“You now appear here again with a large army, as though you were the instrument
o f celestial justice. Com e to my court: let us h av e an interview an d decide if it will be
necessary to bring the troops together or to send them back, to ch an ce victory or defeat
Korea:
“...W hat shall we obey? Justice, with no restriction. The m an w ho violates it
merits no pardon. I con clu de that on e must elim inate w hoever denies it, decapitate
Do not flee: bow down and obey!"
“The fifth year o f the reign o f Tung-Tehy, the ninth moon, the eleventh day?
This text, in which Zubcr recognized “a certain good sense.’’ received “an
w hoever violates it.’’
“For all time, relations with neighbors an d assistance to travelers have been
traditional. In our kingdom w e show still m ore thoughtfulness an d goodwill. It often
happens that navigators ignoring the location and nam e o f the country touch on our
coasts. We ask them if they com e with peacefu l intentions; we give foodstuffs to those
w ho are hungry, clothing to those w ho are naked, and we care for the sick. Such is the
rule which has always been follow ed in our kingdom, suffering no infraction. Thus in
the eyes o f all the world, Korea is the kingdom o f justice an d civilization. But if there
are men w ho com e to sedu ce our subjects, entering secretly, changing their clothing and
studying our language, men w ho dem oralize our people an d upset our customs, then
the w orld’s ancient law holds that they shou ld b e put to death. Such is the rule for all
kingdoms, for all empires. Why then do you take offense if we have observed it? Is it not
sufficient that we do not ask you the reasons which have brought you here from faraway
unfavorable response.”
And so it was war. It was short. The fort of Kanghwado held out against all attacks.
Zuber notes with a touch of astonishment that the Korean troops “comported themselves
well and displayed military skill and a certain bravura.” It is likely that, for him as for
many others, the “sweet Korean soul" was incompatible with warlike virtues. The theme
would crop up again. At the time of the Russo-Japanese war, the magazine Lectures pour
Thus, renowned for its Spartan spirit, reproached the Koreans severely for not keeping
their gaze fixed on the “blue line” of Yalu, and found the key to Korea’s misfortunes not
in an untenable geographic location, a heritage of wars and invasions, or the gangrene of
Chinese imperial behaviors, but instead in a mysteriously “apathetic” disposition of the
Korean character.
These apathetic Koreans were the descendants of hill people who had cut apart
three hundred thousand Chinese in a single battle. They were sailors and soldiers who
had twice forced the Japanese to cross back over the sea. Decline? In 1871, at the self­
same fort of Kanghwado, attacked in force by the U.S. Marines (already), the defenders
stood until the last man-and in the following century, Koreans from both camps
left more than a million (military) dead in the course of the war which, in all history,
“brought together the largest number of combatants and the most bombs per square mile,
and caused the greatest number of disasters" (Pentagon report). When the sweet soul is
able to survive such things, it amounts to a virtue.
What is more, human nature is too concerned with maintaining a certain balance
for a characteristic whose dominance becomes symbolic not to call up the countervailing
force of its own denial. The extreme sensibility of the Koreans (for that one must see an
entire theater burst into tears as soon as there is some heart-rending twist in the action)
can transform into extreme violence and even extreme cruelty if pricked deeply enough.
We saw it during the Japanese occupation, and we saw it-horribly-during the civil war.
In fact this merely brings the Koreans back into line with a norm that we have learned
to measure, and whose signs we read every day. Other traits are more exceptional. These
Koreans capable of bravura are also capable of courage: in the history of how many
people does one find an episode comparable to the “non-violent uprising" of 1919, when,
totally dominated by the Japanese, without any possibility of armed revolt, the leaders of
the Korean Resistance invited the leaders of the occupying power to dinner (the lapancse
disdained to send anyone but a bureaucrat) in order to read them their Declaration of
lands?"
“You establish yourselves upon our soil as if it were yours, an d thereby you violate
reason abom inably. When your ships went up the im perial river a short time ago they
were but two; the men upon them were no m ore than a thousand. If w e h a d w ished to
destroy them, h ad we not arm s? But through goodw ill an d becau se o f the respect du e to
strangers, w e d id not suffer anyone to do them harm or to show them hostility."
“Thus after crossing our borders they took or accepted as many b eef cattle or
chickens as they wished, an d were questioned in polite terms. They were offered gifts,
without being disturbed in any way. Consequently you show a lack o f gratitude toward
us, whereas l do not toward you. This does not satisfy you; w e h ad to force you away,
your return is unseemly. This tim e you pillage my cities, you kill my people, you destroy
my goods and my flocks. Never have w e seen a m ore serious violation o f the Heavens
and the laws. What is more, it is said that you wish to spread your religion in my
kingdom. In this you do wrong. The different b ooks have particular sentences in which
they present the true and the false. What harm is it that I follow my religion, an d you,
yours? If it is blam eworthy to renounce o n e ’s ancestors, why then do you com e to teach
us to aban don ours and to take others foreign to us? If m en with such teachings may
not b e put to death, we sh all d o better to renounce Heaven itself!"
“I treat you as Yu an d Tan treated the im pious Kopey, an d you take umbrage like
Nysean-yean toward Tcheu-uen. Though I d o not dare com pare m yself to these fam ous
THE S I X DAYS
The first Korean girl descended from the
heavens. A friendly rose, flat and rather far from
the archetype (Indigenae candidi sunt, el procerae
staturae, says Mercator’s Atlas), she alone among
her sisters betrayed the far-off Tunguskan origins
that the anthropologists ascribe to her ancestor,
the demi-god Tangun (2332 B.C.). No doubt
it was this blend of traits that led the Korean
employment counselors to glimpse her vocation,
the same as the Druggist's in Giraudoux’s
Intermezzo: the gift for transitions.
The Far East lines are guarded by young
women: Olga in Omsk, a shepherdess of TupolcvMacha in Chita, leading the twin-engines out
to pasture in the violet dawn of Mongolia. The
last relay, the Air-Eastess, skewered us through
China: congregations of incredulous camels
startled by the shadow of the Ilyushin, squares
of Tartar silk drying alongside the yurts, the
petrified thunder of the Great Wall to which a
train, silent for our ears, laid siege with its white
cry. K alm uki murus contra Tártaros. Another
wall of pink and white dust, brick and mercury:
on the Taedong river, before the bridge rebuilt by
the Chinese volunteers, a fisherman let his net
slip between his fingers, grain by grain, like a
rosary. Soft morning, city. Tolerant even toward
its clichés, Korea greeted us...
Independence? Having proclaimed their liberty by force of will alone, they suffered the
consequences of their act with the same lucid dignity. An attempt was made to compel
the elderly Yi Yong-shik to reveal the location of the Korean headquarters. His response:
"The Korean HQ is in Heaven.” An answer worthy of Joan of Arc.
The end of Zuber's account is hazy. According to the Korean version of events,
the French drew back before the resistance of the fort and, pursued by their enemies, re­
embarked with all haste. According to the Tour du Monde, after a few initial clashes had
earned the Koreans their certificate of good conduct, the little war turned into a hunting
party to occupy the soldiers’ leisure. And on October 22, with no other explanation, the
squadron left Korea.
"The result that had been expected of the expedition was not in the least obtained,”
notes Zubcr. Indeed, the Koreans concluded it was a technical knock-out, showed
greater suspicion toward foreigners, refused all attempts at commerce more firmly than
ever, and, where the departure point of the whole affair was concerned, launched a wave
of persecution against the Christians, whom they accused of colluding with the foreign
aggressors.
The officer concludes on a melancholy note: “As you can see, we had not the
fortune to make ourselves loved during our stay.”
with morning calm.
5
Is there no one
to keep the
moon from
disappearing,
to tie the morning
sun beneath
the horizon?
Then I would live
one more day.
(Story o f Sim Chon)
THE SIX
The first Korean girl descended from the
heavens. A friendly rose, flat and rather far from
the archetype (Indigenae candidi sunt, el procerae
staturae, says Mercator’s Atlas), she alone among
her sisters betrayed the far-off Tunguskan origins
that the anthropologists ascribe to her ancestor,
the demi-god Tangun (2332 B.C.). No doubt
it was this blend of traits that led the Korean
employment counselors to glimpse her vocation,
the same as the Druggist's in Giraudoux’s
Intermezzo: the gift for transitions.
The Far East lines are guarded by young
women: Olga in Omsk, a shepherdess of TupolcvMacha in Chita, leading the twin-engines out
to pasture in the violet dawn of Mongolia. The
last relay, the Air-Eastess, skewered us through
China: congregations of incredulous camels
startled by the shadow of the Ilyushin, squares
of Tartar silk drying alongside the yurts, the
petrified thunder of the Great Wall to which a
train, silent for our ears, laid siege with its white
cry. K aim uki murus contra Tártaros. Another
wall of pink and white dust, brick and mercury:
on the Taedong river, before the bridge rebuilt by
the Chinese volunteers, a fisherman let his net
slip between his fingers, grain by grain, like a
rosary. Soft morning, city. Tolerant even toward
its clichés, Korea greeted us...
Independence? Having proclaimed their liberty by force of will alone, they suffered the
consequences of their act with the same lucid dignity. An attempt was made to compel
the elderly Yi Yong-shik to reveal the location of the Korean headquarters. His response:
"The Korean HQ is in Heaven.” An answer worthy of Joan of Arc.
The end of Zuber’s account is hazy. According to the Korean version of events,
the French drew back before the resistance of the fort and, pursued by their enemies, re­
embarked with all haste. According to the Tour du Monde, after a few initial clashes had
earned the Koreans their certificate of good conduct, the little war turned into a hunting
party to occupy the soldiers’ leisure. And on October 22, with no other explanation, the
squadron left Korea.
"The result that had been expected of the expedition was not in the least obtained,”
notes Zubcr. Indeed, the Koreans concluded it was a technical knock-out. showed
greater suspicion toward foreigners, refused all attempts at commerce more firmly than
ever, and, where the departure point of the whole affair was concerned, launched a wave
of persecution against the Christians, whom they accused of colluding with the foreign
aggressors.
The officer concludes on a melancholy note: “As you can see, we had not the
fortune to make ourselves loved during our stay.”
with morning calm.
5
DAYS
Is there no one
to keep the
moon from
disappearing,
to tie the morning
sun beneath
the horizon?
Then I would live
one more day.
(Story o f Sim Chon)
Korea, Korai... On my first image of
Pyongyang, the same curling lips, the same
playful, tranquil smile that 1 had photographed a
year before in the Athens museum. Language has
its reasons.
There are different ways of travcling-the
Bamabooth way, the Genghis Khan way. the
Plume way (invented by Henri Michaux). For
example: accepting the disorder of rhymes, waves,
shocks, all the bumpers of memory, its meteors
and undertows. Chance has intuitions, which
shouldn't always be taken for coincidences. The
country where you have just set foot delegates
you a woman’s face which sums it up already,
and names it. (A great ship whose prow slowly
turns round and stares at you, like a horse.) Its
name is Sweetness.
Between the praying figure of the Acropolis
and this woman met before the monument to
the war dead, carrying her baby Korean style
like a parachute, there is probably nothing in
common except Eve’s smile before the first owl.
(The smile of which Malraux writes-but thinking
only of art.. . - “each tim e it reappears, something
o f G reece is waiting to blossom !’) But that all
of history, with its rasps and its blood sweats,
has not yet done away with the human smile...
Upon reflection, this meeting was worth a cable.
“FROM OUR SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT IN
PYONGYANG STOP LIFE IS STILL SWEET
STOP PHOTO FOLLOWS”
Her name is Softness, her other name is
Gravity. Difficult names to fix on the Western face,
where the smile’s erasure can (at best) become
sadness, but almost never this second key, this
obscure side of sweetness. As difficult to describe
as the restraint of these young women, their
integrity, their self-respect, everything that gives
that whoever does good will be rewarded, and
whoever does evil will be punished.” Far from
imported beliefs, there exists a national credo
that can be formulated more or less like this:
We are in the world, and we must live... Goodnatured metaphysical sobriety. “Indeed, they are
quite ignorant of controversies, disputes over
the mysteries, heresies, excommunications...”
They are compassionate, and this trait pushes
them to rather unusual actions. In 1905, the war
correspondent Kann reports that a battalion sent
to reestablish order in a faraway district, having
melted away en route “to the exception of four
soldiers and a general," so moved the Emperor
that he hud gratifications distributed to the
deserters, so that they should not remain without
means of subsistence. And what else? Ah yes... “/
wish," says Giraudoux, “that my country should
truly b e worthy o f being called the most polite
in the world, which is to say: that its men and
w om en should be beautiful." Along with China,
Italy and Bororo land, Korea is worthy of being
called the politest country in the world.
its untranslatable freshness to the expression-so
little “partisan” when addressed to them—C/to
nyo tong mou \ comrade young girl...
One evening, at the intermission of The
Story o f Sim Chon. I ran into Lee Hai-sun in front
of the theater gate. Sim Chon had just been tom
away from her poor blind father, to be thrown as
bait to the sea demons. The intermission stretched
out the uncertainty of her fate, and of course Lee
Hai-sun was sobbing, her handkerchief crumpled
against her face. 1 dared to tell her that, in
order to help us follow a somewhat discrepant
plot, our Korean hosts had provided us with a
resume and that everything, it seemed, would
work out for the best. Lee Hai-sun, who had seen
the play two hundred times, looked at me with
suspicion: how could 1 be so sure of the future?
And, ceasing to cry, she began reflecting on the
arid hearts of foreigners who exchange their tears
for reasoning.
Koreans arc sweet. Ezra Pound quotes
Emperor Hong Vu: “Koreans are gentle by
nature.” They are w hite: Mercator isn't alone in
saying so. It is confirmed by the Arab traveler
Ibn Khordadbch, who frequented these regions
in the ninth century. They are confident: “They
exchange presents with the Sovereign of China.
They believe that if they did not exchange
presents with him, it would not rain in their
country.” (I.K.) They are virtuous: “After Ki
Tse had published a Code, composed simply of
eight laws, the Koreans’ mores became so well
balanced that the crimes of rape and adultery
were unknown to them, and it was unnecessary
to close the doors of the houses during the night,”
writes Father du Halde. And the author of the
Recueil des Voyages du Nord goes on: “As to their
beliefs, the Koreans are convinced
It remains that the Oriental smile, as
everyone knows, is a mask-that the Asiatic is a
tiger stitched in cat skin. An Oriental dramaturge
would have his tragedies played behind a lowered
curtain. Such is their dissimulation; and the most
dangerous passions circulate in the shadows.
(Variant: The Asian has no passions.)
One morning, at the Pyongyang Hotel,
a young woman told us her life story. Or more
precisely, she explained to us that there was
nothing to be told, really nothing... Her life is
completely, completely simple... Having recorded
a few notes from this gamut of explanations,
1 chalk up the following photographs-cat stitched
s
7
in cat skin-to the account of the Famous Asian
Inscrutability.
Where have I ever seen these expressions
so literally embodied: a smile that melts away, a
face that crumples? The swift or slow corrosion of
flesh that a smile had smoothed and stretched-a
planet attacked by the leprosy of space. I think of
Lee, running after our railway car at the border
station, as we were leaving Korea by those
northern marches that the Korean kings kept
deserted, to hold the Tartars at a distancc-a wall
of emptiness, forty kilometers wide-1 think of
his face suddenly going blurred, as though seen
through his own tears. Or this:
We were visiting the chemical plant of
Hungnam, so proud of its smokestack, “the highest
in Asia,” and of its female cadres. One of these
cadres, the youngest 1 believe, had been invited to
the table set for the ritual of Foreign Delegations:
introductions, refreshments, ginseng candies,
speeches of welcome, the history of the plant,
refreshments, production figures, refreshments,
do you have any questions?-and we did. Of
course the French spirit immediately went to
work on the female cadre: Was she married?
Would she marry soon? Was she thinking of
marriage? How did she go about giving orders
to men? All these questions were completely out
of place in a Communist and Korean world, but
the she-cadre answered with the most generous
kindness, cupping her beautiful plebeian hands
over her face when it was a question of marriage.
(“She is confused,” as our dragoman. Mr. Ok,
gleefully explained...). Finally, Marx winning
out over Offenbach after all, we came to the
economic and professional information, and,
in a detour, to this question: “What do your
parents do?”
2
At that moment I was sunk in my camera.
It was on the Rollei’s ground glass that I saw the
metamorphosis, the smile vanishing into pain
like water drunk by sand. Everyone lowered their
eyes into that chasm of silence, hastily inventing
an imaginary Rolleiflex, a viewfinder to shelter
their gaze, and I heard Mr. Ok explain in a halfwhispered voice that yes, her parents had died
during the war, that it was the case for many
Koreans, and that yes, they felt great pain when
it was mentioned-and now the young woman’s
face was covered in tears, but she did not lower
her head, and the hands that had hidden her
laughter lay immobile on the table.
This instant was hers: it was hers to make
use of, and no one had the mediocre audacity to
offer words of consolation. Just as she had had
the courage of her tears, so she had the courage
to break the silence that we had respected. The
extraordinary hymn of hate and willpower that
followed would need more than a story and an
image to do it justice: holding herself very straight,
looking at no one, her hands drawn behind her,
speaking quickly, blending the words of her pain
and the slogans of the Party, she said that she
hated the Americans who had killed her parents,
but that now her path was perfectly clear, that
she would constantly have to overcome her own
limits, that thanks to the Party her pain itself had
a meaning, and that by working for her country
she would revenge her dead... All of that, in
another tone of voice, would have only been the
catechism of a good militant; here it became both
a Mass of Shadows and a somber Hallelujah.
The dragon had iron teeth: one finds them
here and there, alongside the roads, in the rice
fields, refused by the earth.
Extermination passed over this land. Who
could count what burned with the houses?
Traditional Korean beliefs profoundly linked
the spirits to their material abode-Jyoeng Chu,
the Spirit of the Highest Beam, Tyci Syok, the
Guardian Spirit of the master of the house,
and the souls of the ancestors preserved in the
baskets of clothing... For all those there can be
no resurrection, and there is no other choice for
the living.
But first of all: four million dead, the hatreds
fanned to flames, the infinite accounts to be settled
(a new saga of the Atreidae), all the accumulated
lies... Spare me passionless judgments. The
misunderstanding of the other is as inseparable
from war as from love, and to rebuff the warrior
convinced that the others started it would hardly
go down well with the Heroes-of-thc-Big-One
in our own families. When a country is split in
two by an artificial border and irreconcilable
propaganda is exercised on each side, it’s naive
to ask where the war comes from: the border is
the war.
The tale says that an orphan, rediscovering
her parents' home after many years of exile, had
the surprise of finding herself there already-a
double of herself, identical down to the smallest
detail, who obviously greeted her as an intruder.
She remained nonetheless, and after some
time, in spite of all the examinations, it was still
impossible to tell one from the other. Until the
day when a neighbor (a skeptic) came to see
them-with a cat. At the sight of it, the usurper
jerked bolt upright with fright and took her true
form again-that of a rat.
The ’45 border made the two Korcas into
these orphans, and one wonders which will be
the rat, but above all-w ho will be the cat?
O vos omnes qui transitis
per viam, attendite, et
videte si est dolor sicut
dolor meus.
8
9
THE TWO O R P H A N S
“Still licentious, G eneral M ac Arthur...”:
the event shook up even the typesetters. “The
Third World War has begun. It has begun in
Korea," wrote Marguerite Higgins. General
Bradley was less strident: “Wrong war, in the
wrong place, at the wrong time, and with the
wrong en em y ” It must be said that a certain
difference of mentality appears, to objective eyes,
between a Chinese soldier confident that he is
kicking the imperialists off the Asian continent
and the gung-ho roaring Marine who writes:
“W ho the h ell wants to blow up a colum n of
Chinese? Not me. I ’ve got nothing against them.
N obody ever bothered to tell us why w e should
b e angry. Something abou t the U.N. or something
like that there. And aggressors and stuff. I don't
know. And I'm willing to bet that none o f the
other men up here kn ow either” (Martin RussThe Last Parallel). For lack of information they
mobilized Delacroix's Liberty and the yellow peril
(ROKs excluded), with Christ appearing in the
sky over Korea (Paris Match, October 20, 1951).
In the POW camps, specialists in Psychological
Action submitted the gooks to Rorschach tests to
flush out the communists, and other specialists
published statistics: “Two out o f five Chinese
volunteers are tubercular and on e out o f five is
mentally u n balan ced.” Unfortunately we have
no statistics on the specialists in Psychological
Action.
The idea that North Koreans generally
have of Americans may be strange, but 1 must say,
having lived in the USA around the end of the
Korean War, that nothing can equal the stupidity
and sadism of the combat imagery that went into
circulation at that time. “The Reds burn, roast
and toast!’ Shall those who pray before the burnt,
roasted and toasted bodies call
3
In the Land of Darkness, there is a dog
named Ball-of-Fire. The king of the Land of
Darkness sent him to search out the sun in the
world of men. Ball-of-Fire ran all the way to
the sun. Finally he found it and grabbed it in
his mouth But the sun was too hot and he was
forced to let go. Disappointed, the king told him
to go find the moon, at least. Ball-of-Fire ran all
the way to the moon. Finally he found it and
grabbed it in his mouth. But the moon was too
cold and he was forced to let go. “Try the sun
again,” said the king. And when he came back:
“Try the moon again.” It has been that way ever
since, and the eclipses of the sun and moon prove
that Ball-of-Fire is still at work. The sun is too hot
and the moon is too cold, but because he is a very
brave dog he never gets discouraged, and after
him his children will try ever more. That’s how
dogs are.
out to other burnt and mutilated bodies for help,
as though the torture victims of opposite camps
somehow canceled each other out? Such is the
mathematics of the day after war. I prefer to keep
a few four-leaf clovers like this one, borrowed
once again from dear old Martin Russ: on the
night of June 27-28 when the cease-fire was
proclaimed, a Chinese commando group came
up to Ava outpost-which had been regularly
attacked until then-and laid out candy and
handkerchiefs at the Americans’ feet. “The men
that were still on Ava stared, nothing m ore!’
Sit, gods, upon your thrones,
and smile at Troy\
At the Korean market, in his bookstore
open to most all the winds (those of the northeast
and the southwest at any rate-the favorable
ones), walled up on one side by planks, on the
other by sheets of corrugated iron covered by
paintings and scrolls, between shelves equally
laden with modem magazines and old bound
editions (the thin spines of the folios gathered
together and stitched up like flower stalks, the
paper rather poor, but still a caress for the eyes
even before the fingers: a poor man’s caress)-the
bookseller sits reading. This country will never
cease to amaze. Zuber, our m iles gloriosus,
already remarked on the abundance of books
in the most impoverished dwellings, drawing a
few bitter reflections at a time (1866) when the
illiteracy of young French soldiers was a standing
source of jokes. But to each his illiteracy: culture
began, in Korea, with those who could read
Chinese characters (indeed, the Korean alphabet
ll
THE SEVEN W ONDER S
was invented to help people correctly pronounce
Chinese-and incidentally their own language,
but nobody seemed particularly worried about
that). Let’s face it, the Korean letters, those little
Miró characters, backbone flutes and crabapples
(true, the carée is a cider apple in Calvados), can
only suffer from comparison with the sumptuous
bacteria of Chinese graphics. But the latter are
already condemned in their own land: our world
is one of corridors, gangways, escalators—to move
with the traffic, words have to put on functional,
interchangeable garb: a nylon. Brocaded and
chasublcd, festooned with pennants and aigrettes
like the generals of Peking Opera, Chinese
characters just can’t make it through anymore.
At least they sifted out the greater part of
Korean literature, our ignorance of which is hard
not to regret. If Valery Larbaud’s shade invited
me to play desert island on the theme: Korean
books, I’d be reduced to poaching from the
bibliography by Marcel Courant, and trusting
the titles. Everyone knows that The Sacred B ook
o f the Copper Man is an anatomical treatise,
and The Marvelous Collection of Extended
Succor is a medical dictionary. But what about
The Carefree Treatise on the Brilliance o f Jade,
The Five Happy Procedures to Obtain the Ten
Thousand Treasures, and The Story o f Two
Dragons Seen in a D ream ? I would certainly
take two treatises among the nine tomes of The
Story o f the Cinnamon-Tree Palace, Offerings to
the G od o f Literature: The Treatise o f Mysterious
Influences, and The Treatise Counseling One
Not to B e M isled by Sham eless Boofcs-although
that would restrict the rest of my choices. The
generous Larbaud might accept not to count the
Verses That Can B e R ead in Both Directions as
two... But if 1 had only one left to choose-not a
moment’s hesitation, number 2933: Give No Free
Rein to Sentiment, Even if Alone.
A marketplace is the Republic of Things
(I mean the ideal Republic, of course): the whole
is greater than the sum of its parts, it is beautiful
even if the details are gauche or banal. Thus the
Mercato Nuovo in Florence, where every object
taken separately is an offense to the spirit’s good
manners, while the whole is as flamboyant and
funny as a high altar. The Mercato Coreano is
not so simple. “Korea? writes Father du Halde,
“furnishes white paper, brushes o f hair an d w olf
ta il Ginseng, gold, silver, iron, yellow varnish
so beautiful that anything coated in it appears
gilded: the tree w hence this gum is distilled
resem bles a palm ; chickens w hose tail is three
feet long, ponies three feet high, sa ble an d beaver
pelts, and fossil salt." To which I would add, on
the basis of my modest knowledge of Korean
marketplaces: playing cards which are pleasantlooking flat dominoes, as in japan, women's
clothing-the short tapestry bolero, transparent
and stiff as a chrysalis, and the long, dark-colored
skirt knotted at the first swell of the breastsribbons covered in gilt letters to encourage
longevity, cothume sandals with incurving prow,
blue elephants, pink cats, pens and lamps, old
opium pouches modestly called the smoker’s
necessity, watch faces strung together like sapeks,
flowers... and a somewhat Promethean, I mean
aquiline, taste for the entrails of things: the
innards of radios, the plexus of an electric razor
or the thorax of a lock. Men sit chatting, squatting
like the dead in the niches of Mexican cemeteries.
And Mexico is not far off: it’s in the white cloth
suits, the broad-brimmed straw hats, it surfaces
in the tanned faces, in the nonchalance of an eye
stretched out in its slit like a hammock at the
gleaming crest of the cheek-it’s walking with this
peasant (it could be an old Tarasco) who amuses
himself scaring groups of people by uncovering,
in a single movement, the serpent (though not
cries or shouts, rather all rustles and soft squeaksa gathering of birds. And before me, without
a single adult in view (except for the white
shadow busy at some kind of cooking behind the
windowed door), three very young Fates tracing
figures of style, from the berceuse to the paean.
Perhaps they were Haisuni, Talsuni, and
Peolsuni, the three little girls in the story (our
Little Red Riding Hood multiplied by three, with
the wolf replaced by a tiger-of course, how else
could he pass for their grandmother?). In the end,
Haisuni becomes the sun, Talsuni the moon, and
Peolsuni the stars, and their job is to leave no
patch of shadow on the surface of the earth, nor
in the hearts of men.
plumed) that he holds on his fist—it bursts out of
the sack just as I frame, when suddenly another
figure violently enters the field and bang!-he slaps
the old man with the back of his hand, and the
latter shies away to disappear who knows where,
bringing his serpent along with hint... maybe for
some little baby-sitting at Alcmena's?
An instant later the self-appointed lawman
has disappeared in his turn, and the people on
the street are smiling at me and gesturing that
everything is fine now. It all went by as quickly
as a forgotten image between two shots, but what
1 felt there, the way a foot laid inadvertently
on a tomb makes you feel the cold of death for
one second, was a flash of hatred (so Mexican!).
Toward me? Toward him? Blame, shame, fear?
A critique of bad country manners, exasperation
at my desire for the picturesque while they're
trying to build a modem Korea-or is it just that
ophiolatry is prohibited in this town? I'll never
know. Vexed, I buy a pink cat. It has Apollinaire’s
look in its eyes, and that reinvigorates me: after
all, some things escape them as well.
A great deal of Korea strolls by on Koreans’
heads. Like those salon magicians hired round the
turn of the ccntury-barcly introduced beneath a
false name before they would begin juggling with
the furniture to entertain the guests-the Koreans
like to set objects dancing. Baskets, earthenware
jars, bundles of wood, basins, all escape the earth’s
gravity to become satellites of these calm planets,
obeying exacting orbits, For the Korean street has
its cycles, its waves, its rails. In this double decor,
where hastened rains and buildings still aborning
strike a second’s balance of incomplction, the
soldier who (forcsightedly) buys a civilian’s sun
hat, the worker leaving the construction site,
the bureaucrat with his briefcase, the woman in
traditional dress and the woman in modem dress,
the porter carrying a brand-new allegory to the
museum of the Revolution with a woman in black
following step by step to decipher it-all have
their route and precise place, like constellations.
Nobody crebillonates.* If they stop, it’s to learn
something: Syngman Rhee receives phony fangs
of corruption from the Yankees, Sputnik 3 is
At the end of the Kaesong market, where
the canal divides the last shops from the oldest
district of the city, six children watched me
watching them. A mirror game that goes on and
on, where the loser is the one who looks down,
who lets the other’s gaze pass through, like a ball.
The long volley of smiles.
My third eye was a bit like cheating. Every
click of the shutter was greeted with great hilarity,
like when Chaplin puts an iron in his boxing glove.
At half-time the three little girls got together, and
with much natural grace and gravity they offered
me their performance.
Behind me. the muffled sound of the market
crowd, numerous, calm, almost without
a great socialist victory... Ballasted with this
knowledge, the sputniks of the street gravitate
again to their meditative round.
Another wonder: ginseng (insam in
Korean). Father du Halde surprises me with this
one: “The Gin Seng o f Tsoe toen resem bles a
m an: it is purple and rather flat" It’s the most
precious vegetable in the world. (In the Chinese
apothecaries, levites with lunar skulls bustle like
so many Bruce Willises around delicate hanging
scales tracing figures in the air, to deliver you
ten grams of the salutary mandrake for the price
of a hundred grams of gold.) It was the Chinese
aphrodisiac: rich Mandarins outfitted caravans
to seek this root of deathlessness. They died of it.
Raised to the rank of divinities by their exploits,
they were called back by the jealous (or curious)
gods. The eighteenth century, which took an
interest in such things, gave a great reputation
to ginseng. Looking for flying men, I found
it mentioned in Richard Owen Cambridge’s
Scribleriad: “that restorative the tartar boasts...”
Jesuit chastity and Marxist austerity agree
to underscore other medical properties of
ginseng. It heals. This must be understood in the
absolute: it is not one of those vulgar medicines
that only treats a single illness, or a hundred-as
ridiculously specialized as the prostitutes of
Pompeii. With ginseng, the verb to heal must be
used like the verb to rain.
Father du Halde consents nonetheless to
get into detail, but the detail soon covers the
whole and overflows it: “It m aintains the girth;
it fixes the an im al spirits in p lace; it stops the
palpitations cau sed by sudden fright.” It even
cures that sickness the Portuguese call p esadelo
(“those afflicted by this illness imagine in their
sleep that som eon e is lying next to them"). It is
•NOTE, 1997: crebillonner is a neologism coined by French writer Valery Larbaud after the rue Crebillon
in Nantes, “center of elegance,” where people go just to be seen.
12
THE FIVE S E N S E S
good for sleep (when one is “troubled by dreams
and phan tom s”), good for dog bites {“an d troubles
o f the spleene"), and finally, last, not least, it can
help “when the entrails com e out the sides"
But the seventh wonder of Korea, more
wonderful still than the art of the ginseng
gardeners, is the work of the builders.
It takes fifty years to complete a ginseng
plant (five thousand, says the Hsi yu chi) but
only five days to complete a street-five weeks
to build a house-five months to transform
a neighborhood. Korea grows like a plant in
a movie. It’s a phenomenon that surpasses
architecture and politics to enter biology.
You can travel without fear across the
countryside: if the car is just a little slow, the
road will catch up. Don’t reverse too fast after
moving ahead: there may be a house behind you.
Never retrace by night a path you followed one
week earlier by day. And above all, never rely on
landmarks. They get moved.
When there aren’t any cranes, they invent
them-in sections. When there aren’t any trucks,
out come the wheelbarrows, the hods, the boats,
the cupped hands, the Marne taxis.
Little Korean inventions like the pedal
pump or the string shovel serve to multiply the
effort (with a bit of training you can leave the
work to the girls).
All that in a grand flourish of trophies, red
flags, embroidered slogans stretched between
two poles, with the International or the Little
Red Berries in the loudspeakers, if not the
marching song of the People’s Army, whichto a rather bouncy rhythm-is none other than
O Tannenbaum ...
Every Korean meal is a costume party-but
the food wears the disguises. The eggs are crosshatched, the duck is lacquered, the beef askew,
the greens red-hot... The salad is mixed up, the
tongue falls silent, the brains are amnesiac. As for
the fish, you’d best be quick-it’s cuttles.
In the midst of dinner appears the Grail
{“the room overflowed with fine smells, as
though scattered with all the earth's spices”)
- i t ’s the kettle of fairies, a culinary tower of Babel,
herbs, seaweeds, segments, slivers, microcosms
all counterpointing to infinity, feverish as a
Constituent Assembly.
The poorest Korean child sees these
wonders at least once a year: for his birthday. But
at midnight the enchantment is over and, like
Cinderella in reverse, he regrets the vanished
pumpkins.
At nightfall, on the Taedong river bridge,
one hears the students' songs fading away as
the boat brings them back to the University after
a day on the worksites-but the dusk is quicker:
it hides them, and their song disappears some
time after they do, like the memory of the dead.
All night long, the aurora borealis of welding
torches, spotlights on the cranes, reflections of
the moon and the headlights on the great glassy
façades of new buildings-and the coarse chants
of the haulers, the porters, mounting in waves
amid the half-sleep of an imaginary Africa shot
through with electric flashes...
I don’t much care for propaganda photos
in the style: “Yesterday... Today...” But still
I took these pictures of what I saw out my
window, at fifteen day's distance. Just not to get
the wrong room.
A roadway of m ctcors-it would already
have been a street on the moon, and will soon be
one on Earth. The little girl took a stone, pressed
it lovingly to her heart, and crawled over to
contribute it. The Kid followed approvingly, lost
in Fourierist statistics.
On the earthen sidewalk, they played
with pebbles (you gather up all you can, before
the stone thrown in the air is taken back by the
gathering hand). She gathered jerkily, fascinated
by the springing stone that measured out such
scanty time. She tried to hypnotize it, to suspend
its llight, to work the well-known miracle of the
Irish ascetics.
What could 1 do for her...
. . . if not stop time?
“If you're not very careful, y ou ’re going to
take your father or mother, your sister or brother,
for a cow, an d th en -g ob bled up. Nothing’s more
bitter than being unable to tell the difference
between peop le an d cows. And yet there’s nothing
for it. One day a m an eats his own brother! After
a w hile h e realizes w hat h e has done, but it’s too
late. And nothing can provide him an excuse..."
This is the literal translation of the beginning of
a Korean tale. And if you get the impression that
you recognize someone* in this written-spoken,
lost-found tone, it’s the right impression.
Eating bird’s flesh weakens the memory.
And without memory, no stories to tell, and
untold stories go rotten. And words left to sleep
drift into terrible dreams. One man closed up all
his stories in a sack-they took revenge, became
poison fruits, scalding water, red-hot iron, a tangle
of snakes. They had to be killed with swords.
When a cat and a dog set out in search of
a precious stone, stolen from their masters by an
evil woman (and I ask you, what better use for a
cat and dog’s time?), the dog began barking in
front of the woman’s house, but the cat ordered
the mice to go find the stone (the green one) in
the closet, and the mice prudently obeyed; then
the dog with his stupid questions made the cat
drop the stone he was holding between his teeth,
and it fell to the bottom of the water, but when
a fisherman found a dead fish, the cat took to
reckoning: “This fish died from eating the stone,”
so he opened the fish-and the dead fish gave up
the stone. Which is why the clever cat has the
right to stay inside the house, while the stupid
dog stays out.
“NOTE. 1997: “someone...”: Can you tell me why I didn’t simply write “Michaux”?
14
15
In Korean tales you glimpse more than
you see. Lots of apparitions, dreams, cracks into
another world of which only a wavering memory
remains: “I am the tiger you saved yesterday"
says a pretty girl. And Sim Chon: “your face I
so dream ed o f has disappeared like the w in d...”
(I have already spoken of The Story o f Sim Chon.
which for Korea is David Copperfield, the Book
of Tobias and the Götterdämmerung all rolled
into one).
Or the Holy Virgin, at that: when Sim
Chon’s mother. Lady Okjin, appears between
the crystal candles in Act IV (which takes place
under the sea), you can’t help but feel Fatima
rising in your esteem. (It may be worth stressing
that at the end of the play, the blind see.)
So faraway, so inaccessible is the world
of miracles, revealed only by tatters of fairies,
beasts, masked things, images furtive like the
rumblings of a hidden God, narrow as the cracks
in the mirrors of enormous Korean closets,
arrow-slits through which no Eurydice could
possibly return.
The same goatpath near the tumuli-the same
goats-the same shadowy square for Berenice.
Fewer tombs, three only, and no tourists. But
the same cool air, making the beasts weep on
the walls.
The guardian’s little girl watches over these
animals with perplexity. There is the phoenix
(which the translator, lacking the proper word,
succeeded in defining as a fantastic chicken)
and the four cardinal points: the Cock, the blue
Dragon, the white Tiger, and the black Tortoise.
Perhaps in the mountains they hunt the maneating West, the fire-breathing East. Perhaps
lovers wake at night to the song of the South,
and children catch the North at river mouths, to
make their soup.
Your name is Kim Shen-Suk, you are a great
actress of Korean cinema-and theater: you have
played Desdemona (and yet. says the author of
Cérémonies et coutum es religieuses des peuples
idolâtres, “where jealousy is concerned, |thc
Koreans] are less obsessed than the Chinese...”).
You have married Tche To-miung and your baby
is called Tche In-tcho Your husband tells him
the stories of Sim Chon, Chunhyang, and Hcun
Bo, and you sing him the song that begins with
K w a e -fi-n a -c h in g -c h in g -n a h -n e u , or with
Toraji, Toraji, or the one whose refrain goes
Nilliria, Nilliria, Nilliria—and of course Arirang,
the Korean lament of homesickness (the Asian
version of the blues), which says poetically: "So
many stars in the sky, so many sighs in my heart”
and prosaically: "If you leave m e your feet will
a c h e -le ss than a mite away ”
The smell of the fields had already brought
me back to Italy, even before the tombs of Kanso
brought me back to Caere and the Etruscan
tombs. It seems that the geographical comparison
between Korea and Italy is traditional: isn’t it
touching to find geography in tune with feeling?
(But perhaps geography is no more than coded
feeling.) The light, the beauty of the faces, the
savor of life that makes nothing appear negligible
or futile (“a day that w ould have been lost h ad
it p assed anywhere but in Italy” says Larbaud...).
And here, the same grass-covered domes like
fortress turrets, the same corridors, the same
square rooms with their parallel beds, their
walls covered in frescoes, ochre, white, blueand extending memory backwards like a film
rewinding, the road to Cerveteri with its X-shaped
barriers in the fields, its stone bridge and zigzags
(k o b l-a h . k o b l- a h . sang Kim), the same things
you already see in the painting by Filippo Lippi.
16
17
5
The Koreans' fondness for legends earned
them jibes from the missionaries, who preferred
to trust only what they saw with their own
eyes-like Guillaume de Kuysbroeck in Tartary,
describing curious hairy animals that leap to their
drinks crying Chin-Chin.
Having seen nothing of the like at the
bottom of the river Taedong, 1 won’t insist on an
involuntary plunge,* nor on the reflex that led me
(rather than any attempt at swimming) to clasp
tightly in my pocket the silver tetradrachma that
protects me.
Even though 1 read today, in an article by
M.C. Haguenauer: “The water spirits detest gold
an d silver, on e merely n eed carry a little on o n e ’s
person to avoid drowning'.'
THE T HRE E S I S T E R S
This trust in the past comes perhaps from
the fact that the world, here, has hardly budged
since its creation by Hannanim, the Celestial
Lord. If the painting can be superimposed upon
the photograph, so can legend upon history, and
the brushstrokes of Hannanim’s decor are too
clear and sure for it to be abandoned simply
because the play has changed.
A new boat can be built without throwing
away the sea, says a Gorgolian proverb. All the
new Korea is built on ancient soil, a thousand
times overturned and wounded, beneath whichlike blind rivers, lakes of solvent-stretch the weary
souls of warriors, the ductile souls of separated
lovers, the skeptical souls of innumerable literati
destroyed by the tyrants.
Hannanim did not cut his creation into
slices, like some God concerned with his effect,
bringing the action gradually to climax (Sixth and
Last Tableau: Man! Finale with the whole cast...).
Hardly had he perfected a form, but he offered it
to the full gamut of creatures, and to nature itself.
He invented the curve and on this form he lay
the eye of the literati and the roof of the temple.
The same mold served him for the grain of rice
and the peasant’s tooth. And when he succeeded,
clever foundryman, in an alloy of strength and
sweetness, he shared it equitably between the
ocean and man, teaching each how to let his
strength lay at the bottom of his sweetness, like
an anchor.
•NOTE, 1997: And why didn’t I insist? The shattered look of three contacts, plus the words “involuntary
plunge,” was that really enough to reconstruct the chain of events? The boat that slips away from the
dock at the last moment, my step into the void (the subliminal consciousness that it was nothing, that I
would walk on w ater-I swear...), the quick descent to the bottom of the river and, after an instinctive
kick, the equally quick ascent, no time for panic but one immediate concern: “The photos!” And the
good ol’ Rolleiflcx dismounted in a flash, dried, one roll damaged but saved... With today’s electronic
marvels, the journey would have been over.
19
(List of the spirits and stars that govern
human life)
Here, torn from the pages of Hanninam’s
diary: the Man of the Heavens, the Man of Earth,
the Man of the Sea.
1. The Five Elements
2. The Nine Mansions
3. The Ten Trunks
4. The Twelve Branches
5. The Four Spirits
6. The Great Spirit of the Year
7. The Bad Luck of the Year
8. The Plague of the Year
9. The Great Marshall
(spirit of trials and quarrels)
10. Sickness
11. Brigandage
12. War
13. The Plagues
14. The Disasters
15. Death
16. The Silkworm Disease
17. Ruin (Tai soai)
18. The Fivefold Demon
19. The White Tiger
20. Mourning
21. The Spirit of Metal
22. The Punishments
23. The Yellow Standard
24. Failure
25. Funerals
26. The Wind
27. The Epizootic
28. The Ruin (Tai ho)
29. The Leopard’s Tail
30. The Spirit of the Silkworm
31. The Moon
32. Koan pou,
‘which lends access to high functions”
Calm waters
The Chilsan drums
shatter the silence.
Do they speak of dawn?
Upon the severed sea
Chejoo island
at hand’s reach.
Goodbye Mount Halla!
Until we return.
Sky and ocean
studded with stars.
The silken waves
touch the heavens.
Goodbye, dear homeland,
we leave on the sea.
(Marcel Courant - B ibliographie Coréenne)
(The Story o f Sim Chon)
20
21
When atop the
mountains’ silk
the winter moans,
Together we will
remain alone
-You, the bamboo1, the pine.
The wind’s cold hands
will twist
the other trees, naked
without leaves
-W ho will not be
envious then
of you and I, unchanged?
(Story o f Chunhyang)
THE NINE MUSE S
We left in the early morning, at the same
time as the woodcutters. A man of the forestpurple and rather flat, as Father du Halde would
say-showed us our path. Was he the last avatar of
T’yoen ha tai chang kun, the Great Commander
beneath the Heavens, charged with guarding
all pathways?
In the forest awaited the figures of the gods,
countersigned by the visitors (Korean writing,
where graffiti becomes ornament!), and farther
above were the severe waterfalls, their cheeks
tattooed with poems-Chinese characters, each
fifteen meters high-gurgling with the sound of
some huge animal drinking.
Kumgan-san, the Diamond Mountain...
The tigers that inhabit it have now disappeared.
The last were disguised as women picking
potatoes, and girls bearing earthenware jars. All
have been destroyed, even the grandfather, the
White Tiger.
We met a young woman. As she was not
picking potatoes and bore no earthenware jar,
but a cyclopean baby, she was not a tiger. But
if accounts are made, there must remain in the
mountains one bear-doctor, nine dragons, and
fifty-three golden Buddhas disembarked from
a stone ship. There arc also the Sinscuns,
immortal beings. So you never quite know whom
you meet.
Ahn Seung-hi dances the sword dance
(Kal tchun), the fan dance, the butterfly dance,
the gypsy dance (the most exotic for us), and
the dance of the Mou nyo, the sorceress, the
matchmaker of the dead.
(As late as 1933 one could still find
the “union of pious persons” registered in
Scoul-gathering all sorcerers and sorceresses in
awareness of their rights.)
With her little bells, her large-handled
knife, her fans, her feathered hat, slow at first,
then successively casting the bells, the knife, the
fans, casting her gaze in the end—her mouth
stretched out by the frozen speed, like the pilots
of supersonic jets-the passage of the Wall of the
Dead, given over to all the blows and insults of
the dear departed, a screen shredded by their
nails, a window shattered by their cries-Aigo.'
Aigo! the cry of mourning and suffering-falling
exhausted, her throat burning with the oxygen
of hell, paying the passage of the Styx with the
money thrown to her, Aigo!
“Som e o f them are quite pretty',’ writes
Haguenhauer, “an d not only the spirits are
touched by their charms
fill their pitchers. A first attempt failed, and the
prudent fairies continued to draw their water
from the lake, by lowering a bucket from Heaven.
Seeing this, the woodcutter-I told you that he
was hardy-simply hid in the bucket and rose to
Heaven to take his wife.)
The earth frays and rips here near the sea,
and the planet’s true skin shows soft and finely
grained through its rags. Between these false,
striated islands, joined by isthmuses of sand as
fragile as the touch of two sleepers brushing
each other in the night, in this sweet and solitary
land on the edge of green water (where so many
cats must have dropped soluble stones), upon
these gray, flat boulders, silence mounts like
fog-troubled only by the strange countersigns of
French journalists, conveyed by the wind: d ealmy turn-cut... incantations of a recalcitrant, but
apparently effective magic, since no bucket came
to carry them to the heavens, despite my prayers.
Among the summits of the Diamond
Mountain, there are three which recall the
episode of the lake, the deer, and the hardy
woodcutter. Here again, the rules of the game:
you have to look a long time, staring at the three
summits, then close your eyes. At that moment, it
is said, the colors are reversed, the sky darkens,
and shadows of shadows appear in the darkness,
the faces of the three sisters.
Tonight an d every night... Like the Windmill
Theatre during the Blitz, the underground theater
of Moranbong kept playing, every day of the war.
The sound of the bombardments disappeared,
swallowed up by the earth. Outside, Pyongyang
burned, the roof lines changed form, the walls fell,
the doors slammed. Korean theater lived there
for two years, a hundred meters beneath the
hill, with pyramidal corridors, Piranesian galleries,
school benches, and a wooden stage, buried like
a fakir.
One must be circumspect in these parts:
even before being told, you can guess that the
water of lake Samilpo “is better than that o f
H eaven" and that the fairies prefer to come draw
their drink here, at the risk of being ravished by a
hardy woodcutter.
(This woodcutter had saved a deer pursued
by a hunter. The deer, who knew, revealed to
him that three fairy-sisters came every day to
22
23
Today, the theater of Moranbong belongs
to the children. They come to see puppet plays:
swallows gather in conclaves, feudal ghosts
return to pester cheapskates, musicians pop out
of pumpkins. The existence of the underground
adds to the enchantments.
The Underworld exists, in the legends. An
ogre sleeps there, eyes wide open. The young hero
prepares for combat by drinking mandrake juice
and wrestling with an iron flail. Just like Suen U
Kung. But instead of saving his soul, he marries a
beautiful princess. Boys will be boys.
“My dear, when you are
gone,
Choose, if you can,
To be a temple bell
Rung morning and evening.
And remember, remember,
The wooden mallet that
strikes you
Is m e... ”
(The Story o f Chunhyang)
THE FOUR C O R N E R S
Nearby the village of Haisanni, a few
kilometers from Kaesong, eight stone giants
guard the tomb that the thirty-first king of Koryo
(Kongmin, the painter-king) built for the woman
he loved, the queen Kokuk Kong-chu.
Et am ava perdutam enle Ixotta degli Atti...
With its stone tables, its animals oriented by the
stars, its moon-based domes draped in lichen,
nothing is foreign in this royal cemetery. At
Tcotihuacan, at Saint Peter’s in Rome, we met
with barbarity (1 mean that which offends the
heart, not the mind). But here we recognized
the passion of Pedro and Ines. laying foot to foot
in Alcobaya, “so that when they lift their heavy
tom bstones and rise up on fudgm ent Day, their
first gaze will b e for each other!’ And the passion
of Sigismondo erecting his temple in Rimini-the
eclipse of love and glory, with its core of shadow
and its flaming corolla: Tendresur-Orgueil.*
The weight of the past, enforced by these
countless tombs, these tortoises bearing the
mileposts of time, advancing imperceptibly
across the countryside, heads raised skyward...
Can it be reduced to the sole role of ornament, as
we do? Can the borderline between statues and
men be drawn so tight that no vertigo crosses, no
vast cry of madness or destruction?
For some time still two Korcas stand face
to face. The question arises everywhere, except
where culture has irrevocably become the stuff of
museums. What will be lost, what will not, what
will change skins, these forms threatened with
remaining forms, these forces threatened with
remaining forces, all these enemy currents: the
The ten-meter teeter-totter, the learian
seesaw that shoots you up and takes you back,
feet together, palms at your sides-thosc arc
ladies’ games. A man doesn’t fly. he lets fly.
Bowmanship remains the sport of the
elite. The bamboo and buffalo-horn bow, with its
double curve, obeys the eye more than the hand.
Once the gaze is planted squarely in the middle
of the target, the arrow has only to follow.
Throughout whole afternoons, the men
(a few old-timers among them) riddle a plank
stuck some 150 meters away among the bare
stones. It seems to waver in the sun. A hit on
the target sends back a brief echo, like a popgun.
People stroll at the foot of the shooting ground,
beneath the deluge of arrows, indifferent to
the piles mounting above their heads like the
horsemen of The Triumph o f Death.
construction that lies and the truth that destroys,
free constraint and free despair, hymns to joy and
deep-dwelling chants-all we can do is listen to
their mutually jamming broadcasts in ourselves,
while waiting for the bigamy of spirit to be
condemned by the law. All the while straining
never to forget-if one did, the Korean legend
would be there to say it in its way-that a moment
comes when man's life must be paid for with the
death of his gods.
A woodcutter had saved a pheasant
threatened by a snake. Changed into a girl, the
snake succeeded in leading the woodcutter into
a tower, and there-caught tight. The woodcutter
invoked the protection of the gods, and the
serpent-girl agreed to wait until dawn: if the
woodcutter could prevail upon the gods to sound
a temple bell a few miles distant, she would let
him live. The vigil began, the woodcutter in agony,
the snake-girl attentive. And toward the middle of
the night, the temple bell rang heavily. Terrified,
the snake slipped away, the tower disappeared in
a puff of smoke. When the woodcutter reached
the temple after several hours’ march to thank
the gods, he saw a smear of still-fresh blood on
the bell, and on the ground, the broken body of a
pheasant.
The gaze of the victor, perhaps alone among
all the gazes captured in Korea, seems lacking
in modesty.
The changgo, a drum shaped like an
hourglass, makes even tigers dance. A young man
who inherited such a drum saw a great cat prance
out of the forest and do the tiger trot all around
him. (The black gum-thc hyen gum-a melodious
stringed crocodile derived from the Chinese
khin, is in fact called hyen h ack gum, the “gum
of the black cranes.” Its inventor found himself
surrounded by black cranes as he strummed
its first chord-and they too began dancing.
It’s enough to make you wonder if all Korean
instruments should not receive the honors of the
Animal Academy of Music.)
'NOTE. 1997: Literally, “Tendemess-on-Pride”-refers to the sentimental geography established by
Madeleine de Scudery in her l.e Carte de Tendre (“Map of Love”).
25
Is it the changgo, or are the Koreans truly
tireless? At the factory of Sonsan (as in all the
others, we would later realize), hardly has the
break-whistle sounded but the workers-after
struggling four long hours with ruined Japanese
locomotives that they make sparkling new, like
counterfeiters-gather together in circles and:
Ongeyha... As though they could only rest
from one effort with another, as though they
somewhere had an hourglass that need only be
upturned for all that accumulated, inert fatigue
to become energy again-an hourglass of which
the changgo would be less the stimulant than
the image.
If, the last time I went swimming in Santa
Monica (California), instead of returning to the
land, called back by who knows what Hollywood
frivolities, I had continued straight ahead. I would
have arrived today, if 1 calculate right, at Sonsan
beach-where 1 am. Appointment in Somarra.
Sunday in Sonsan: on a platform planted
with trees, the changgo and the accordion play by
turns. Under the pale yellow sun of late afternoon,
the dancers-couples of men. couples of women,
even a Pierrot Lunairc dancing only for himselfappear and disappear in my viewfinder like
visitors to an aquarium. When the music stops,
one hears the sleeper’s sigh of the nearby Pacific,
a hard sleeper.
Indolence, that famous Korean indolence
(no doubt their transparency before the military
brutes) had its anthropological guarantee: an
Oceanian connection. Only the sound and fury
of an incomparable history could have shifted the
destinies of a second Tahiti.
Must one be thankful to history for
preserving Korea from the terrible old age of
former paradises, for helping it, not to corrupt
its beauty but rather to clothe its innocence, to
exchange its Gauguins for Renoirs, and to choose
the right Robinson?
“H ei h e i y ai; hei, h e iy a ...
When the bamboo leaves begin rustling in
the wind, we seem to hear the sound of a hundred
thousand men...
The water-lily blossoms, moistened by the
rain, as beautiful as the three thousand servant
girls bathing...
Last year the weather was kind, the
harvest rich; the rain fell in time and the wind
was propitious. This year will also be good: if the
harvest is fine we will sate our hunger and fill
our bellies, our backs will be warm, we will be
happy.
H ei h e i y a i; hei, h eiy a ...
Butterflies! Butterflies! Let’s go to the blue
mountain! Tiger-striped butterflies! Come with
us! If the night catches up to us on the way, we
will rest in flowery bouquets...
Let us go! If the flowers have fallen we will
hide beneath the shadowy trees...
We crossed a carpet of flowers on our
horses; at each step our mounts crushed the
flowers and freed their perfumes...
H ei you hei' you, ei, h e i ya ya; ha ha, h e i
yo...
Comrades, o y tcha, ha tcha, ha, h e i you,
hei' ya, o ho, Icho yo tcha, tcho yo tcha, lift, lift
our sticks...”
(letter to the cat G.)
-N o, cat G., I will not deal with the Big Issues. They don’t lack other hands, look to
your usual newspaper. Were 1 to speak of them, it would be in the style of Henry V: “An
orator is only a loud mouth, a motto is only a slogan, politics change, statistics are faked,
fine alliances break, bright flags tarnish, but a human face, good cat, is the sun and the
m oon...”
It is with the face turned toward me that I have true relations. No longer are
there Korea and Koreans, singular and plural of the same night, but only these familiar
faccs-and that is the Golden Fleece...
(I know you will have the intelligence-cats understand such things-not to see
me playing Humankind against History, all those capital H’s with which one works up
a sweat of understanding each morning, barbells for the intellectual... 1 know that my
relations with these faces, with these familiar people, all filter through history, and that
to help or to harm them there are other means than pataphysics. But if the Big Issues
must be involved in this relation, let that remain between them and m e-it’s not for the
onlookers. At the bottom of this trip is human friendship. The rest is silence.)
1 also know you will not ask me. perched atop god’s flail, to hand out praise and
blame, to make accounts and-least of all-to give lessons. They’re not lacking either. My
Korean friends (and my Chinese and Soviet friends), you have not finished receiving
lessons—lessons in political realism from the honest scribes of the Great Agony, lessons
of tolerance from under Inquisitor’s robes, while from the back seat they’ll tell you, really,
you attach too much importance to material success. The blind husband will snicker
at your daughters’ purity, the half-learned at the infancy of your art, and everyone will
weave you a crown of thorns from their own failures.
The times are strange, good cat, and fast. Lewis Carroll lied: a fox terrier wanders
among the signs of the zodiac. And on the oceans the great whales proclaim the glory of
the Lord, hallelujah.
It’s the festival of machines: so they are decorated-flowers, green plants, flags,
quotations. Offer them necklaces, pendants, they will become vain like owls. Just a little
longer, cat, and they will take care of the house. Just a little longer.
And then, cat, we’ll be their cats.
(Work song “taken by dictation from the laborers
who worked in 1890 on French Commissariat in
Seoul,” quoted by Marcel Courant.)
Pyongyang-Paris, 1958
’ NOTE, 1997: Why so many mysteries? And why deprive him of his name, after all these years, the
good cat Gédéon, who lived on Ile Saint-Louis and ambled over the rooftops in the company
of unlikely bicycles?
26
Must one be thankful to history for
preserving Korea from the terrible old age of
former paradises, for helping it, not to corrupt
its beauty but rather to clothe its innocence, to
exchange its Gauguins for Renoirs, and to choose
the right Robinson?
“H ei h e i y a i; hei, h e iy a ...
When the bamboo leaves begin rustling in
the wind, we seem to hear the sound of a hundred
thousand men...
The water-lily blossoms, moistened by the
rain, as beautiful as the three thousand servant
girls bathing...
Last year the weather was kind, the
harvest rich; the rain fell in time and the wind
was propitious. This year will also be good: if the
harvest is fine we will sate our hunger and fill
our bellies, our backs will be warm, we will be
happy.
H ei h e iy a i; hei, h eiy a ...
Butterflies! Butterflies! Let’s go to the blue
mountain! Tiger-striped butterflies! Come with
us! If the night catches up to us on the way, we
will rest in flowery bouquets...
Let us go! If the flowers have fallen we will
hide beneath the shadowy trees...
We crossed a carpet of flowers on our
horses;, at each step our mounts crushed the
flowers and freed their perfumes...
H ei you h e i you, ei, h e i ya ya; h a ha, h ei
yo...
Comrades, o y tcha, ha Icha, ha, h ei you,
h e i ya, o ho, tcho yo tcha, tcho yo tcha, lift, lift
our sticks...”
(letter to the cat G.)
-N o, cat G., I will not deal with the Big Issues. They don’t lack other hands, look to
your usual newspaper. Were 1 to speak of them, it would be in the style of Henry V: “An
orator is only a loud-mouth, a motto is only a slogan, politics change, statistics are faked,
fine alliances break, bright flags tarnish, but a human face, good cat, is the sun and the
moon...”
It is with the face turned toward me that 1 have true relations. No longer are
there Korea and Koreans, singular and plural of the same night, but only these familiar
faces-and that is the Golden Fleece...
(I know you will have the intelligence-cats understand such things-not to see
me playing Humankind against History, all those capital H’s with which one works up
a sweat of understanding each morning, barbells for the intellectual... 1 know that my
relations with these faces, with these familiar people, all filter through history, and that
to help or to harm them there are other means than pataphysics. But if the Big Issues
must be involved in this relation, let that remain between them and m e-it’s not for the
onlookers. At the bottom of this trip is human friendship. The rest is silence.)
1 also know you will not ask me. perched atop god’s flail, to hand out praise and
blame, to make accounts and-least of all-to give lessons. They’re not lacking either. My
Korean friends (and my Chinese and Soviet friends), you have not finished receiving
lessons-lessons in political realism from the honest scribes of the Great Agony, lessons
of tolerance from under Inquisitor’s robes, while from the back seat they’ll tell you, really,
you attach too much importance to material success. The blind husband will snicker
at your daughters’ purity, the half-learned at the infancy of your art, and everyone will
weave you a crown of thorns from their own failures.
The times are strange, good cat, and fast. Lewis Carroll lied: a fox terrier wanders
among the signs of the zodiac. And on the oceans the great whales proclaim the glory of
the Lord, hallelujah.
ft’s the festival of machines: so they are decorated-flowers, green plants, flags,
quotations. Offer them necklaces, pendants, they will become vain like owls. Just a little
longer, cat, and they will take care of the house. Just a little longer.
And then, cat, we’ll be their cats.
(Work song “taken by dictation from the laborers
who worked in 1890 on French Commissariat in
Seoul," quoted by Marcel Courant.)
Pyongyang-Paris, 1958
"'NOTE, 1997: Why so many mysteries? And why deprive him of his name, after all these years, the
good cat Gédéon, who lived on lie Saint-Louis and ambled over the rooftops in the company
of unlikely bicycles?
26
AFTERWORD
1997
I have chosen to reproduce this text exactly as it was published in 1959. Nearly
forty years later, it’s legitimate to ask a few questions: does it refer to a world irremediably
rejected by history, in the name of the famous “crisis of ideologies”? Those men and
women who I saw work so hard, with a courage the propaganda-makers weren’t shy of
exploiting, but which it would be extremely silly to reduce to its imagery-did they really
work for nothing? The newspapers one reads in spring 1997 are devastating: “famine,”
“total failure,” “corruption everywhere”.... There’s no reason to beat around the bush:
that wager was lost, terribly, and the Koreans have once again illustrated their Greek
propensity for hubris. Always excess, in sentiment, in war, in history.
As to this book, it had a peculiar destiny. Rejected by both camps, not flattering
enough for the North (with this primary and inexpiable stain: not a single mention of
Kim Il-Sung’s name!), immediately identified as communist propaganda by the South,
which did me the honor of exhibiting it in a vitrine at the counter-revolutionary museum
with the label “Marxist dog” (which didn’t seem particularly insulting to me: 1 can see
Snoopy leaving Herman Hesse aside for a while to read Das K apital...). You can let
yourself be flattered by that kind of symmetry, you can make comparisons with Chaplin
at the end of The Pilgrim, sniped at by both sides, walking tip toe along the border
line-you can tell yourself that getting flak from both ends is a pretty good indication
you’re on the right track. It's a short-sighted glory, an easy way of setting yourself above
the fray. The times are demanding more than that. If 1 ever had a passion in the field of
politics, it’s a passion for understanding. Understanding how people manage to live on
a planet like ours. Understanding how they seek, how they try, how they make mistakes,
how they get over them, how they learn, how they lose their way... Which immediately
put me on the side of the people who seek and make mistakes, as opposed to those who
seek nothing, except to conserve, defend themselves, and deny all the rest.
What did we go looking for in the fifties—sixties in Korea, in China, and later in
Cuba? Above all-and this is so easily forgotten today, with the hocus-pocus over that
uncertain concept of “ideologies”- a break with the Soviet model. Chronology has its
importance here. I do not belong to the generation that rose with the great wave of
1917 It was a tragic generation, buoyed by a disproportionate hope, only to become
the accomplice of disproportionate crimes. In the film I devoted to him, Alexander
Medvedkin uses this powerful image: “In all o f hum an history there w as never a
generation like ours... It’s like in astronomy, those 'black stars’ that shrink down to a
few square inches an d weigh many tons. My life cou ld b e represented by such a black
hole!' We who were lucky enough to be bom on the other side of the black hole could
not ignore the depth of its failure, and those who say “we didn’t know” are damn liars.
Long before Solzhenitsyn, we had read Victor Serge, Koestler, Suvarin. Charles Plisnier
(oddly forgotten today, although he exposed the entire mechanism of the Moscow trials
as early as 1936, in Memoirs o f a Secret Revolutionary). Nobody was ever going to feed
us the workers’ paradise line again. Which was just another reason to go see
28
29
how younger peoples, geographically and culturally removed from the old European
models, were going to face the challenge of constructing a new society. Those children of
Confucius, Lao-Tzu, Bolivar, or Marti had no reason to kneel before dogma elaborated
by bureaucrats bom from a Leninist host-mother inseminated by Kafka. The answer is:
•NOTE, 1997: There was so much blabbering
around that topic (communism=Nazism. or not)
that perhaps it’s convenient to refine. 1 will have
spent the first half of my life battling with the
Stalinists about the similarities between both
monsters, and the second half fencing with others
about the differences. The catchword is “utopia"
and how it applies to reality The Nazi model
applied perfectly, there wasn’t any gap between
the ideology and its realization. So-called
communism was a perpetual errancy between
an impracticable doctrine and the cavortings of
real life. Here war communism, there NEP, then
Class Against Class, and again Popular Frontsand the disciplined intellectuals exhausting
themselves in order to give a posteriori the
polished look of revealed truth to a completely
insane praxis. The seminal book by Edgar Morin,
Self-Criticism, establishes clearly how the Party,
like the Church, perpetually feeds heresy for the
simple reason that just proclaiming the dogma is
enough to underline its caricatural estrangement
from society. No Nazi heresy will arise from
the reexamination of the founding texts. (Inner
contradictions are just power struggles, read
Ian Kersaw.) Try to imagine what a “Nazi
dissident” could be... You read the Holy Scripts
and watch the Vatican, you read the Manifesto
and watch USSR, and you wonder who goofed.
You read Mein K am pf and watch the Third
Reich: everything fits, everything applies, not the
slightest crack.
they did.
Another thing: in the mid-fifties, a quiver of expectation ran through the USSR
itself, and the Muscovites of today speak with poignant nostalgia of those years when
life became livable again, when the terror receded, when nothing had been won with
any certainty but it wasn’t sheer madness to envisage gradual progress toward freedom.
In short, perestroika was imaginable at a time when its side-effects would have been
infinitely less costly. The doors of the future had begun to swing open, slowly, with
lots of grating and creaking, but they were moving. It would have taken enormous
historical pessimism to foresee Brezhnev and the period of what the people back there
call stagnation, more criminal still than Stalin from the historical viewpoint, because no
one could have changed Stalin, whereas it was possible to change Brezhnev. And once
again, the pessimists would have been right.
So the balance sheet is totally disastrous, and I feel neither the right nor the
inclination to ignore that. But I’d like to note two things, which for me have their
importance.
Much has been made of the resemblances between the two totalitarianisms,
communism and Nazism. They are undeniable, with this one difference, that the
communists committed their crimes in betrayal of the values on which they founded
themselves, and the Nazis, in fulfillment of theirs. Maybe that’s the wrong question. Or
maybe it’s the whole question*
And to close: all the despair accumulated at this century’s end, all the shattered
hopes, so many victims, so many resignations, all that still doesn't give me an ounce of
inclination for even a sketch of indulgence toward society “as it is.” During the Cold War
1 used to say to my comrades on both sides, “What you call the errors of socialism is
socialism, what you call unbridled capitalism is capitalism.” For now only one of those
two behemoths remains on its feet, but the other’s defeat has not humanized the survivor,
on the contrary. Interviewed on television shortly after the fall of the Berlin Wall, my
fellow filmmaker Claude Lelouch, who is not a Marxist dog, made a comment full of
good sense: ‘'Communism h ad at least this much going for it, it scared the m on ey-m en and left to their own devices, the money-m en are cap ab le o f anything, believe me, I know
what they’re lik e...”. I find it fitting to give a filmmaker the last word on the twentieth
century, which despite all its shams had so little real cxistcncc-which may after all have
been nothing but an immense, unending fade-over.
Port-Kosinki, May 1997
31
And finally, culture. .. True, to most politicians,
culture is little more than an appendice to charity.
But when you take seriously the cultural field,
when you look at it as a clu e? On one side, a
sample of the greatest achievements that XXth
century begot as far as poets, painters, musicians,
filmmakers are concerned. Persecuted, betrayed,
self-murdered, exterminated, misunderstood,
diverted, desperate, sullied, what else? (with
strange historical twists: Stalin defending
Mayakovsky and Pasternak...) but present, and
indissociablc from the whole enterprise. On the
other side, NOTHING-apart from, in movies, a
talented adventurer. Would such unbalance be
meaningless?